Indicative Present (simple) : Bruno Delavigne moves effortlessly between his San Francisco office and the exotic locales where he sources rare fragrance ingredients.
Indicative Present progressive / continuous : The noseless perfumer is moving his surfboard collection from the garage to the Delavigne Corporation rooftop, and nobody is asking why.
Indicative Past (simple) : After his grandfather Xavier's death, Bruno moved from the small Montmartre shop to a larger atelier, carrying nothing but a box of old perfume formulas.
Indicative Past progressive / continuous : Horatio Oléré was moving boxes of fragrance samples when Bruno called to announce the Delavigne Corporation had just signed its biggest contract yet.
Indicative Present perfect (simple) : The grandson of Xavier has moved the Delavigne Corporation from a tiny Montmartre shop to a global cosmetics empire in just a few decades.
Indicative Present perfect progressive / continuous : Bruno has been moving steadily toward greener production methods, a shift that has delighted environmental activists who follow the Delavigne Corporation closely.
Indicative Past perfect : By the time the bulls were released in Pamplona, Bruno had already moved to a safer spot on the street — or so he claimed.
Indicative Past perfect progressive / continuous : The San Francisco staff had been moving furniture around the boardroom for hours before Bruno walked in and quietly suggested they try the other direction.
Indicative Future : Next spring, the Delavigne Corporation will move its fragrance fire prevention campaign to cities across three continents.
Indicative Future progressive / continuous : While Horatio handles the shareholders, Bruno will be moving through the waves off the San Francisco coast, completely unreachable by phone.
Indicative Future perfect : By the time his surfing lesson ends, the CEO will have moved further out to sea than his instructor ever intended.
Indicative Future perfect progressive / continuous : By the anniversary of Xavier's passing, Bruno will have been moving between grief and gratitude for thirty years, channeling both into every bottle the Delavigne Corporation produces.
Conditional Simple : Bruno would move the Delavigne Corporation headquarters to Pamplona in a heartbeat if Horatio Oléré would ever agree to it.
Conditional Progressive : Without the quarterly board meeting looming, the perfumer would be moving his belongings to a beachside bungalow in San Francisco right about now.
Conditional Perfect : Bruno would have moved back to Montmartre years ago if the memory of his grandfather's explosion hadn't made the old workshop impossible to return to.
Conditional Perfect progressive : Had the environmental charity gala not run so long, Delavigne would have been moving through the crowd, shaking hands, for another two hours at least.
Imperative Imperative : « Move those fragrance canisters away from the open flame, please — we've had quite enough explosions in this family, » Bruno tells the new Delavigne Corporation intern.
Traduction
Français
bouger
Deutsch
bewegen
Español
mover
Italiano
muovere
Português
mover
Nederlands
bewegen
中文
移动
Si vous avez des difficultés avec la conjugaison en anglais du verbe to move, découvrez nos cours d'anglais en ligne !
Vatefaireconjuguer est un conjugueur en ligne gratuit édité par Gymglish qui propose des cours de langues en ligne fun, concis et personnalisés : cours d'anglais, cours d'orthographe, cours d'espagnol, cours d'allemand, cours d'italien, cours de français langue étrangère (FLE)... Conjuguez le verbe anglais à tous les temps et tous les modes : Présent, Passé composé, Imparfait, Plus-que-parfait, Passé simple, Passé antérieur, Futur simple, Futur antérieur, Conditionnel, Subjonctif, Impératif, etc. Vous ne savez pas comment conjuguer en anglais ? Écrivez simplement le verbe dans le moteur de recherche pour découvrir sa conjugaison anglaise. Vous pouvez aussi conjuguer une phrase, par exemple 'conjuguer un verbe' ! Accédez à notre liste de tous les verbes irréguliers anglais avec leur conjugaison (to eat, to leave, to feel, to run, etc.) et à notre liste des verbes modaux anglais (can, should, would, etc.). Pour progresser en français, Gymglish propose aussi des cours d'orthographe et met à disposition de nombreuses règles de grammaire, d'orthographe et de conjugaison pour maîtriser la langue française !